The Porcupine Presents ...

When Laughter Turns Sinister | Inner Sanctum - “The Death Laugh” (1944)

29 min · 21. maj 2026
episode When Laughter Turns Sinister | Inner Sanctum - “The Death Laugh” (1944) cover

Description

A classic horror drama from the golden age of radio — plus bonus commentary and trivia after the show. Inner Sanctum – “The Death Laugh” (1944) Step back into the golden age of radio with Inner Sanctum, the iconic horror and suspense series known for its dark humor, unsettling atmosphere, and a host who seems far too pleased with what’s about to unfold. In this 1944 classic, “The Death Laugh,” a familiar sound — a laugh — becomes something far more disturbing, as guilt, coincidence, and psychological terror intertwine in ways that refuse easy explanation. After the broadcast, stay tuned for bonus commentary and behind-the-scenes trivia — including how Inner Sanctum turned ordinary sensations into sources of dread, why humor and horror coexist so comfortably in the series, and how wartime anxiety shaped stories where fear often came from within. Originally aired: 1944Approx. runtime: 30 minutes

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the The Porcupine Presents ... community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

140 episodes

episode Holmes Returns to Radio | The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - “The Haunting of Sherlock Holmes” (1946) artwork

Holmes Returns to Radio | The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - “The Haunting of Sherlock Holmes” (1946)

A classic Sherlock Holmes radio drama — plus bonus commentary and trivia after the show. The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – “The Haunting of Sherlock Holmes” (1946) Step back into the golden age of radio with The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, the definitive American radio incarnation of Conan Doyle’s great detective. In this 1946 episode, “The Haunting of Sherlock Holmes,” a case steeped in rumor, fear, and psychological disturbance forces Holmes to confront a mystery that resists easy rational explanation. After the broadcast, stay tuned for bonus commentary and behind-the-scenes trivia — including the cultural moment that shaped postwar Holmes stories, the enduring legacy of Basil Rathbone’s performance, and how this episode serves as a fitting companion to the completion of the original fifteen-part series Sherlock Holmes: The Last Analysis, now fully available on The Porcupine Presents. Originally aired: 1946 Approx. runtime: 31 minutes

9. juli 202631 min
episode When the Game Finally Ends | Sherlock Holmes: The Last Analysis, Episode 15 – “Resolution” artwork

When the Game Finally Ends | Sherlock Holmes: The Last Analysis, Episode 15 – “Resolution”

A modern Sherlock Holmes audio drama — where the analysis comes to rest. Sherlock Holmes: The Last Analysis – Episode 15 Chapters 29, 30 & 31 — “Resolution” In the final chapter of The Last Analysis, the case concludes not through revelation alone, but through reckoning. What began as an inquiry into guilt, control, and emotional insulation resolves into something quieter and more enduring: acceptance, choice, and connection. As Sherlock Holmes confronts the consequences of love, loss, and vulnerability, the divisions that once defined him — intellect versus emotion, duty versus desire — are finally allowed to coexist. The story closes not with certainty, but with balance, and with the understanding that lives are not solved so much as lived. The Last Analysis concludes its original continuation of the BBC Sherlock legacy — a psychological mystery rooted as much in human connection as in brilliance. Released bi-monthly on The Porcupine Presents. Originally aired: July 2026 Approx. runtime: 36 minutes Website: theporcupinepresents.com [http://theporcupinepresents.com]

6. juli 202635 min
episode The Tyranny of Normal | Author’s Playhouse - “Country of the Blind” (1944) artwork

The Tyranny of Normal | Author’s Playhouse - “Country of the Blind” (1944)

A classic psychological drama from the golden age of radio — plus bonus commentary and trivia after the show. Author’s Playhouse – “The Tyranny of Normal” (1944) Step back into the golden age of radio with Author’s Playhouse, a short-lived but intellectually ambitious series that adapted classic literature for thoughtful, idea-driven broadcasts. In this 1944 episode, “Country of the Blind,” a lone outsider stumbles upon a hidden society whose rigid sense of normalcy renders vision itself dangerous — and dissent unthinkable. After the broadcast, stay tuned for bonus commentary and behind-the-scenes trivia — including the origins of Author’s Playhouse, the show’s place on the fringes of golden age radio, and how H. G. Wells’s own conflicted beliefs about progress, expertise, and authority echo uneasily through this unsettling adaptation. Originally aired: October 16, 1944 Approx. runtime: 30 minutes Website: theporcupinepresents.com [http://theporcupinepresents.com]

2. juli 202629 min
episode When the Mind Turns on Itself | Murder at Midnight - “Nightmare” (1946) artwork

When the Mind Turns on Itself | Murder at Midnight - “Nightmare” (1946)

A classic psychological thriller from the golden age of radio — plus commentary and trivia after the show. Murder at Midnight – “Nightmare” (1946) Step back into the darker corners of the golden age of radio with Murder at Midnight, a short-lived but daring suspense series that traded heroes and detectives for isolation, guilt, and interior collapse. In this 1946 episode, “Nightmare,” the listener is drawn inside a fractured consciousness where memory, fear, and reality bleed together — and certainty becomes the first casualty. Rather than solving a mystery, the episode watches the mind itself become unstable. The terror here is not an external threat, but the growing suspicion that the truth is already known — distorted, repressed, and waiting to surface. After the broadcast, stay tuned for bonus commentary and behind-the-scenes trivia — including the show’s place among lesser-known radio thrillers, its focus on psychological breakdown over procedural logic, and how postwar American anxieties about memory, guilt, and trauma shaped stories like this one. Originally aired: 1946Approx. runtime: 33 minutes

29. juni 202633 min
episode Bonus Summer Episode: When the Heat Breaks … Murder Follows | The Whistler – "Summer Thunder" (1945) artwork

Bonus Summer Episode: When the Heat Breaks … Murder Follows | The Whistler – "Summer Thunder" (1945)

A classic summer mystery from the golden age of radio — plus bonus commentary and trivia after the show. The Whistler – "Summer Thunder" (1945) Step back into the golden age of radio with The Whistler, the suspense series where an unseen narrator guides ordinary people toward extraordinary—and often tragic—choices. In this 1945 classic, "Summer Thunder," an oppressive heat wave and a violent summer storm set the stage for murder, while a desperate wife accidentally destroys the very evidence that could save her husband. After the broadcast, stay tuned for bonus commentary and behind-the-scenes trivia—including how weather becomes a character in the story, why The Whistler stands apart from traditional detective dramas, and the episode's distinctly British setting. Originally aired: July 30, 1945 Approx. runtime: 34 minutes Website: theporcupinepresents.com [http://theporcupinepresents.com]

27. juni 202634 min